MEAN CANAL CARTOUCHES
P.L.
Furthermore, the development took place at an approximately uniform rate. This is shown by the fact that the line passing through the black stars is approximately straight; for such straightness means that progression down the disk as measured by the latitude bore throughout the same ratio to the time elapsed.
Looking at them again we notice that the three topmost cartouches, those of the north polar, arctic, and sub-arctic canals respectively, dip at the right before the end of the observations, while the other seven were still rising when those observations were brought to a close. A reason for this, or at least a significant coincidence, is to be found in the dotted line pendent from the top of the table and labelled “First Frosts.” This dotted line denotes the date at which the first extensive frost occurred in the polar regions; for even before this time patches of white had appeared north of the Mare Acidalium, denoting the on-coming of the cold. The frost did not last but came and went and came again just as it does on earth, growing more insistent and long-lived at each fresh fall. Its sphere of operation was confined to the three zones in question. Even these zones it by no means covered, merely blotching them in places with fungi-like patches of frost. Beyond them south it never extended during the period of the observations; indeed, it hardly entered the sub-arctic zone at all at this very beginning of the polar winter. For it was only August 20 then. The coincidence of the isotherm as betrayed by the deposition of frost with the dividing line between the canal-development curves that dip down at this season and those that still continue to rise is suggestive.
It becomes all the more so when the three cartouches are considered seriatim. The most polewards, the north polar one, had sunk to zero sometime before the first extensive frost occurred; the second, the arctic, did so later than its northern neighbor, probably just before the epoch in question; while the third, practically outside the zone of deposition, was behind both the others in its descent. Inspection of the drawings upon which the cartouches are based confirms an inference deduced from this: that it was cold that killed, not frost that covered, them, which was responsible for their obliteration. The drawings show that the canals ceased to be seen before the white patches were evident. Now this would be the exact behavior of vegetation. It would be killed, turned brown by freezing, and so rendered invisible to us against its ochre desert background, before the cold had grown intense enough to cover that ground with a solid white carpet of frost. At the opposition of 1905, however, the extreme northern canals were visible after the snow had covered all the country about them, being evident as lines threading the new cap.
These three cartouches furthermore show each a maximum, and what is significant the maximum occurs later in time for each, according as the zone lies remote from the pole. A red star marks this maximum and shows that the time of greatest development for the three zones was respectively:—
41 days after the summer solstice for the North Polar.
61 days after the summer solstice for the Arctic.
95 days after the summer solstice for the Sub-Arctic.
We now pass to the other curves, those that were unaffected by cold. Though in these the minima themselves show the law of latitudinal progression, the wavelike character of the advance is even better disclosed by the curves. As the eye follows them down the page, the advance of the wave to the right is plainly apparent. The slope of the wave is much the same for all, implying that a like force was at work successively down the latitudes.